Belmont police have arrested a 46-year-old man after an attempted robbery turned standoff at the CVS in the 6700 block of Wilkinson Boulevard.

Credit T. Ortega Gaines / Charlotte Observer

BELMONT The standoff between law enforcement and a gunman at a Belmont CVS has ended without injury and all lanes of Wilkinson Boulevard have been reopened.

Edward Scott Russ, 46, of the Gastonia area, was taken into custody without incident shortly after 7 a.m., according to Police Chief Charlie Franklin.

Specific charges are still pending, but Franklin said Russ does have a prior criminal record.

Law enforcement agencies from Gaston and Charlotte-Mecklenburg were on the scene in Belmont Friday morning “and came together as one,” Franklin said.

Gastonia Police Department’s regional SWAT team was among the agencies that responded, and during the standoff, police were able to tie into the store’s surveillance system to watch the suspect, officials said.

The suspect reportedly took a number of pills from the pharmacy area during the next few hours.

Edward Scott Russ

Credit Belmont Police Department

The standoff began shortly before 2 a.m., when two officers responded to the CVS at 6750 Wilkinson Blvd. following several 911 calls about an attempted armed robbery, Franklin said.

The officers entered the store through the front door and were confronted by a suspect carrying an SKS rifle, according to the chief. The suspect did not put down the gun as officers instructed, and instead starting shooting from approximately 15-20 feet away, Franklin said.

Officers returned fire before they were aware of hostages in the store, at which point they backed out of the store and called for back up, according to police.

The two officers who exchanged gunfire with the suspect handled the situation “exactly as they had been trained,” Franklin said. “They were very professional.”

A police negotiator made contact with the gunman a short time later, police said.

Over the next two hours, the three store employees that were being held hostage – one woman and two men – were released without injury.

The suspect reportedly told hostages they wouldn’t be harmed if they listened to what he said, according to Franklin. The suspect first released one of the men and the woman, and later released the last male hostage shortly after 4 a.m., Franklin said.

The negotiator remained in contact and when the suspect surrendered, he laid the rifle on a counter, walked out the front door with his hands up and was taken into custody by a SWAT team, Franklin said.

The suspect “appeared apologetic” and “stated he was sorry,” the chief said.

With the suspect in custody and no one injured “it turned out just like we hoped it would,” Franklin said.

Belmont City Council member Charlie Martin said it was fortunate the two city police officers who were involved were trained how to respond. “You have to be ready anytime a situation like that occurs,” Martin said. “I’m glad nobody got hurt and the situation was resolved.”